On 9/10/11 10:34 AM, sebb wrote:
> On 10 September 2011 17:58, Phil Steitz <phil.steitz@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On 9/10/11 9:21 AM, Ralph Goers wrote:
>>> Are you guys arguing about manifests or build processes. I can't really tell.
>>>
>>> There is no perfect build process. I'm not a fan of voting on an RC and then
renaming the tag and so with VFS I created the tag over and over again for each candidate.
That has its own pitfalls but works since Nexus supports it well. If we were following the
Tomcat and Httpd model I think the first release of VFS 2.0 would have been 2.0.20. I would
think that would make it hard for users to understand what the latest version is, but if it
works for them I'd be interested to know more. Maybe their releases never fail.
>> I agree with you on this, Ralph. I am not sure it is best for us to
>> go down the tc/httpd path as it may be confusing to users. What we
> IMO it's only confusing if there really are a lot of "missing" releases.
> I think Tomcat may do additional checks on the code before putting the
> tag up for formal release vote.
> This can be done on snapshots or even RCs.
>
>> are talking about here is what to put in the manifest of release
>> jars. If we want to put revision numbers in there (I am personally
>> not sold on this), the meaningfulness of what we put in will have
>> impact on the build process. I think it is best to avoid this can
>> of worms and just either leave the attribute off of release jars (as
>> it is only really needed for snaps) or put the final release tag
>> name there. I don't buy the argument that because the release tag
>> is a copied or moved version of the source used to build the release
>> jar it is not sufficient to identify the source. I think it should
>> *definitively* identify the source.
> It should, but it doesn't necessarily.
Where exactly? Do we have release tags that do not correspond
exactly with the release sources now? If so, that is a problem that
needs to be fixed.
>
> I don't see what the harm is in adding the header line.
If it refers to a revision of a deleted tag, I don't see the point
in it.
Phil
>
>> Phil
>>> Ralph
>>>
>>> On Sep 10, 2011, at 9:04 AM, sebb wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 10 September 2011 16:28, Phil Steitz <phil.steitz@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> On 9/10/11 8:18 AM, sebb wrote:
>>>>>> On 10 September 2011 16:09, Phil Steitz <phil.steitz@gmail.com>
wrote:
>>>>>>> Could be I am misunderstanding the proposal here, but IIUC there
is another problem when it comes to release jars. Current practice is to create the jars
from what ends up being the final RC tag. This tag is then either copied or moved to the
release tag, which becomes the definitive source. So at the time the jar is created, the
tag/revision pair that the build number should point to does not exist. The only choice would
seem then to be to reference the RC tag which may end up deleted. So again, it would seem
better to me to either omit the attribute from release jars or just use the (anticipated)
final release tag name.
>>>>>> Tag rename/copy history unfortunately shows the repo revision at
the
>>>>>> time of the copy which makes it quite hard to know what revision
was
>>>>>> actually used for the build. You have to scan the history to check
for
>>>>>> changes.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The point is just to record what was used to create the jars.
>>>>>> Yes, this will differ from the final tag, but having the information
>>>>>> is better than not having it, IMO.
>>>>> Not sure I agree. Seems to me the whole point of having a release
>>>>> tag - the final one that should really be immutable, is that it
>>>>> points unambiguously to the source used to build the distribution.
>>>> Agreed.
>>>>
>>>>> Why do we need to complicate things by referencing revision numbers
>>>>> of (possibly deleted) RC tags?
>>>> Because the official release tag was not used to build the project.
>>>>
>>>> The only way to know what was actually used is to record the tag and
>>>> revision number.
>>>>
>>>> We don't have to store it in the jar manifests, but that seems as good
>>>> a place as any.
>>>>
>>>>>> Note:
>>>>>> One solution to all this uncertainty is to abandon RCs, and just
use
>>>>>> revision numbers.
>>>>>> If the vote fails, bump the revision number and throw away the old
>>>>>> revision and tag. This is what Tomcat and Httpd do.
>>>>> Can you explain exactly how that works?
>>>> This is the process AIUI:
>>>>
>>>> Tag 7.0.22 from trunk; build, vote.
>>>>
>>>> Vote succeeds - release 7.0.22.
>>>>
>>>> Vote fails, create tag 7.0.23 from updated trunk, build and redo vote
>>>> Tag 7.0.22 could now be deleted, but I think they keep all the tags.
>>>>
>>>> Their achives [1] for 7.0.x don't contain 13, 17, 18; but the tags [2] do.
>>>>
>>>> [1] http://archive.apache.org/dist/tomcat/tomcat-7/
>>>> [2] http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tomcat/tc7.0.x/tags/
>>>>> Phil
>>>>>>> Phil
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
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